Relationship
What is Relationship in child development?
In child development, a relationship is the warm, dependable bond a child forms with carers, family and, later, friends. For toddlers it is the foundation for feeling safe to explore, sharing attention, reading feelings and connecting through words and play. Healthy early relationships are how social and emotional skills first take root — not a diagnosis, but the soil everything else grows from.
From the very first shared smile to a toddler running back for a reassuring hug — relationship is the warm thread that ties a child to the people who care for them.
In short
In child development, a relationship is the warm, dependable bond a child forms with the people who care for them — parents, family, carers and, later, friends. For toddlers, it is the foundation for almost everything else: feeling safe enough to explore, learning to share and take turns, reading faces and feelings, and starting to use words to connect. Healthy early relationships are not a luxury — they are how a young brain learns it is loved, and how social and emotional skills first take root.What relationship looks like in the toddler years
Between roughly one and three years, you see relationship growing in small, everyday moments: your toddler looks back at you for reassurance before trying something new, brings a toy to share their delight, settles when you comfort them, and slowly learns to wait, take turns and play alongside other children. These are the early threads of interpersonal interaction — responding to others, showing affection, and managing the give-and-take of being with people. A child builds these skills through thousands of warm, responsive exchanges, not through teaching. When a toddler seems rarely to seek comfort, share attention or respond to familiar faces, it is simply a gentle signal to look more closely — never a verdict, and never a cause for alarm on its own.When to seek a review
Consider a developmental review if, by around two to three years, your toddler rarely makes eye contact, seldom shares enjoyment or seeks comfort, shows little interest in other people, or if their social connecting seems to have slipped backwards. Early, playful support helps relationship skills flourish.The Pinnacle way
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form. Our team looks at the whole picture of how a child connects and relates, then builds a warm, individualised plan that may draw on behaviour therapy and other supports as needed.Trusted sources
WHO Nurturing Care Framework on responsive caregiving in early childhood; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on social-emotional development; CDC milestone guidance on how toddlers relate to others.Next step — If you would like to understand how your toddler is connecting and relating, book a developmental review to celebrate their strengths and add any helpful support early.
What to watch
By two to three years, watch for a toddler who rarely makes eye contact, seldom shares enjoyment or seeks comfort, shows little interest in other people, or whose social connecting seems to have slipped backwards.
Try this at home
Follow your toddler's lead in play — when they bring you a toy or point at something, respond with warmth and words. These small back-and-forth moments are how relationship skills grow.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 730 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is relationship the same as attachment?
They are closely linked. Attachment is the specific emotional bond between a child and a primary carer, while relationship is the wider term covering all the social connections a child builds — with family, carers and other children. Both grow through warm, responsive everyday moments.
At what age do toddlers start forming relationships with other children?
Toddlers usually play alongside other children before they truly play together. Sharing, turn-taking and cooperative play develop gradually from around two to three years and beyond — so early parallel play is completely normal.
What helps build healthy relationships in toddlers?
Warm, responsive caregiving is the heart of it — comforting when upset, sharing delight, talking through feelings and giving plenty of back-and-forth play. Consistency and affection matter far more than any structured activity.